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An Unsuitable Match
An Unsuitable Match
Oct 6, 2024 6:51 PM

Author:Catherine Cookson

An Unsuitable Match

'Humour, toughness, resolution and generosity are Cookson virtues . . . In the specialised world of women's popular fiction, Cookson has created her own territory.' - Helen Dunmore, The Times

Just two years after the death of their mother, Hector Stewart tells his children he plans to remarry and has chosen a distant relative from Ireland to be his bride. Money is tight and the only thing the children remember about Moira Connelly is that she lives in a castle; they suspect that her apparent wealth is the reason their father is so keen to remarry.

But Moira has also been far from forthcoming about her own circumstances – thinking she’s about to marry into landed gentry, she expects a lifestyle to match this title. So when she arrives in rural Fellburn she is surprised to find a rundown farm as her new home…

Can a marriage based on deception survive?

Catherine Cookson was the original and bestselling saga writer, selling over 100 million copies of her novels. If you like Dilly Court, Katie Flynn or Donna Douglas, you'll love Catherine Cookson.

Previously published as The Desert Crop

Reviews

Queen of raw family romances

—— Telegraph

Humour, toughness, resolution and generosity are Cookson virtues . . . In the specialised world of women's popular fiction, Cookson has created her own territory

—— Helen Dunmore, The Times

Catherine Cookson soars above her rivals

—— Mail on Sunday

Subtle, illuminating and captivating

—— Eithne Farry , Mail on Sunday

A moving exploration of love and the sacrifices we're willing to make in its name

—— Joanne Finney , Good Housekeeping

Over a distinguished literary career, Rose Tremain has traversed genres with her customary flair... in her portrayal of the ways in which individual longing and frustration unfold against the constraints of forces beyond our control, Tremain has long been one of our most accomplished novelists, and here is further confirmation

—— Stephanie Merritt , The Observer

An exhilarating exploration of love, life, loss and death... A thrilling and seductive story... Vivid and beguiling

—— Rowan Mantell , Eastern Daily Press

Rose Tremain gives Hilary Mantel a run for her money for the title of Britain's greatest living historical novelist... there are still few writers who can conjure up a version of the past that is so startlingly unfamiliar yet so convincing

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Sunday Express

An enjoyable page-turner

—— Robert Douglas-Fairhurst , The Times

A new book from Rose Tremain is always a cause for celebration. Her exceptionally well-crafted and deeply humane historical novels are invariably a joy and Islands of Mercy is no exception... A rich, rewarding and highly satisfying novel from one of our finest novelists.

—— Daunt Books

Vivid, transgressive, explicit and kaleidoscopic

—— Rose Shepherd , Saga Magazine

A fabulous read

—— Reflections Magazine

Praise for Elizabeth Noble

—— -

A moving and warm-hearted novel about love in all its forms...Nobody weaves a complex web of stories with quite the same skill as Elizabeth Noble

—— Sunday Express

Witty, affectionate and unashamedly tear-jearking

—— Red

Irresistible comfort read

—— Glamour

Tissues are essential. You'll ricochet between delicately watering eyes at the romance of it all and howling sobs at the unbearable tenderness

—— Daily Express

Honest and beautifully written

—— Woman & Home

Noble specialises in warm-hearted tearjerkers with strong connections between women

—— Daily Mail

A moving and warm-hearted novel about love in all its forms . . . Nobody weaves a complex web of stories with quite the same skill as Elizabeth Noble

—— Sunday Express

Witty, affectionate and unashamedly tear-jerking

—— Red

Witty, pacy and immediately engaging

—— Glamour

It would be a hard heart indeed that remained unmoved . . . the tender feelings that Noble engenders in her readers are to be cherished

—— Daily Express

So fluid, the pages turn themselves

—— Daily Mirror

Noble is a mistress of the tearjerking message of love

—— Express

A confident and restrained depiction of friendship… A memorable novel.

—— Daily Express

A moving study of human emotions which will make you cry without being even slightly sentimental.

—— Jackie Kingsley , UK Press Syndication

Beautifully written, this is a book to savour.

—— Choice Magazine

Tender yet sharp, this beautifully composed narrative explores the themes of unrequited love… Tremain has crafted a stunning and wise book that sustains its brilliance right to the end.

—— Attitude

Captivating novel… Illuminated throughout by Tremain’s own empathy, this beautiful book holds the reader effortlessly in its thrall.

—— Stephanie Cross , Lady

What I love about Rose Tremain is her dark elegance.

—— Kerry Fowler , Sainsbury's Magazine

The awfulness of childhood has rarely been so beautifully caught… A deep compassion for the suffering of her characters…makes this novel a beautiful and moving work of art.

—— Jonathan Steinberg , Spectator

Tender new novel… Tremain details the physical toll of heartbreak and this is laced with sadness as happiness eludes. But we feel for Gustav, we want him to break free, to attain it. Crucially, through Tremain’s crafting, we have hope for him, all is not lost.

—— Sophie Gorman , Irish Independent

Tremain is a consummate storyteller… There are few great dramas here, just a moving study of human emotions that’s full of compassion for even its most unappealing characters’

—— Jackie Kingsley , Eastern Daily Press

Turns the unpromising complexities of Swiss neutrality into something more captivating… Tremain plays clever variations on the ideas of distancing and self-denial.

—— Tim Martin , Daily Telegraph

A perceptive and beautifully realized novel of unrequited and misplaced love… A vivid book, alive with different kinds of passion… Written with immense tenderness, and is often extremely funny.

—— Lynn Roberts , Tablet

[A] perfect gem of a novel.

—— Mail on Sunday

Powerfully subtle look at love and rejection in the shadow of war.

—— Sunday Times

Assured and skilfully executed - I loved it

—— Woman & Home

A chilling tale.

—— Country & Town House

This is a perfect novel about life’s imperfection… The narrative skill and subtlety are exemplary… Writing at the height of her inimitable powers. Without giving away the ending, she has the most merciful, believable and uplifting surprise in store.

—— Kate kellaway , Observer

Elegant

—— Daily Mail

Tremain is a writer of exemplary vision and particularity. The fictional world is rendered with extraordinary vividness.

—— Guardian

Her novels combine insight, elegance and sensuality – and this latest is no exception… It’s enthralling and at times exquisitely sad.

—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail

[A] superb new novel… She has the writerly gift of conveying tenderness by what she leaves unsaid. A composition spanning 1939 to 2002, The Gustav Sonata will surely move you to melancholy - as, indeed, does all great music’

—— Madeleine Kingsley , Jewish Chronicle

A shrewd study of neutrality, political and personal.

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times, Book of the Year

I loved Rose Tremain’s The Gustav Sonata… The layers of story are engrossing and beautifully put together. A novel to savour and reread.

—— Helen Dunmore , Observer, Book of the Year

I find her writing very evocative and lacking in the self-indulgence that many successful novelists tend to develop… Absorbing and compelling.

—— Max Blackston , Birmingham Jewish Recorder

Tremain was on top form with her nuanced analysis of emotional and political neutrality, The Gustav Sonata.

—— Ali Smith , Guardian, Book of Year

[A] moving and finely crafted novel about youth and friendship.

—— Alex Preston , Observer, Book of the Year

A compelling read.

—— Guardian, Book of the Year

I feel these characters will remain with me for a long time.

—— Guardian, Book of the Year

Tremain’s finest work yet.

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

Tremain’s sympathetic and perceptive treatment of her characters probes the essence of human relationships.

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

The Gustav Sonata is a powerful, profound and unexpected love story about the enduring damage of unrequited love. It is a masterful, meditative novel.

—— Hannah Beckerman , Guardian

It is a story of betrayal… A moving, human and memorable novel.

—— John Koski , Mail

The novel powerfully explores the implications of a country’s quest for neutrality as well as an individual’s quest for self-mastery, touching upon the difficulties and social tensions that may arise.

—— Harriet Cunningham , Palatinate

Captivating.

—— Week

I was totally engrossed by this beautiful novel about life’s imperfection

—— Michael Etherton , Jewish Telegraph
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